John Lund (conductor)

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John Lund

John Lund (October 20, 1859 – February 1, 1925) was a German-born American conductor and composer.

The son of George Ross Lund and his wife Eva Lund (nee Toernstroem), John Reinhold Lund was born in Hamburg, Germany on October 20, 1859.[1] His father was a businessman,[2] and he was educated in his youth at the Johanneum Gymnasium.[1]

His family initially intended him to pursue a career as a lawyer, but a love of music encouraged by his mother drew his passions in that direction.[2] By the time he was seven years of age he was applying himself to piano lessons, and in 1876 he entered the Leipzig Conservatory (now the University of Music and Theatre Leipzig).[2] There he studied music composition and was trained in several instruments; among them oboe, organ, piano, and violin. His teachers included Carl Reinecke, Oscar Paul, Ernst Richter, and Ernst Ferdinand Wenzel [de].[1] He graduated from the conservatory in 1880.[2] At his commencement his composition Sonata for piano was performed by Karl Muck.[1]

For his first job, Lund was appointed a répétiteur at Theater Bremen in 1880. At that same theatre he was promoted to first chorus master in 1881, and then assistant conductor in 1882.[1] In 1883 he was obtained the post of conductor of the Stettin Stadttheater.[1]

Career in the United States

References

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